Interesting two-page article in ISIS’s weekly al-Naba on Mohammed bin Salman’s religious policies in Saudi Arabia. The conclusion especially.. 1/2pic.twitter.com/ZTN2mHzZZV
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That’ll be a strategic & long-term change, and future ISIS will stabilize along those lines. That won’t be temporary and post-defeat interim change. So the trends I explain in my new article will apply to ISIS too, but much less than they apply to others:https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2019/02/sunni-jihad-turns-away-transnational-terrorism/582745/ …
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Historians will look at this period in time as the end of bin Ladenism, turning away from transnational jihad into a local context. Indeed, even as ISIS was ‘global’, the group’s strategy/operations have always been localized. It won’t need to re-learn it.https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2019/02/sunni-jihad-turns-away-transnational-terrorism/582745/ …
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A major challenge for jihadi groups linked to al-Qaeda is they haven’t yet developed their independent brands to operate as separate/independent jihadi groups. They still need to revolve in al-Qaeda’s orbit in a way, or at least not to go against it full on. Nusra is an example..
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.. this is especially the case in light of rivalry with ISIS. They need al-Qaeda (more the ideology, less the organization) as a jihadi reference & guiding principle. That’ll change with time; ISIS had developed such a separate brand by the time it declared war on AQ in 2014.
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This is in fact an interesting factor in determining & predicting which groups are likely to do away with al-Qaeda bin Ladenism. If the group in question had old local roots in the environment it’s operating, it’s likely to do its own thing. 1/2
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I mean: a jihadi group that was once involved in an insurgency that preceded al-Qaeda of the 1990s, then that group is more likely to revert to those roots. Nusra is an example of the trend above, because it with other groups are direct heirs of the 70s-80s Syrian insurgency.
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.. their ideology is shaped by their memory of the Syrian insurgency (many of the commanders, members or ideologues were active in 70s or are relatives of those who were, and their memory is shaped by the events & the environment, not by the time they spent elsewhere in between.)
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With such dynamics in mind, it’s fairly easy to foresee what’s coming. This next phase of Sunni jihadism requires deeper engagement, but happens to come at a time when the US is leaving & allies are adding to the mess. So the future is bright for jihadis:https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2019/02/sunni-jihad-turns-away-transnational-terrorism/582745/ …
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Why? It would make more sense to move to a location where the world powers aren't already deployed and willing to fight. SE Asia or Northern Africa spring to mind, as both areas have high Muslim populations that could be potentially converted to their cause.
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May God show them the folly of their ways!
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